A Tremendous Roundup Of Street Art Ridiculing Donald Trump

Street artists have a lot to say about President Donald Trump little of it flattering.

Works criticizing the former reality TV personality began appearing on walls around the world soon after he launched his bid for the presidency in June 2015.

Now that the man is actually in the White House, theres been a renewed explosion of anti-Trump murals, stencils and posters.

Below, weve rounded up some of the most notable pieces so far and we expect to add to this collection over the coming months and years.

Seen some anti-Trump street art? Or can you help us further identify the artists or locations of the pieces we already have in the list?Email your images and information to lee.moran@huffingtonpost.com.

1Trump As Adolf Hitler (Pegasus)

Pegasus received death threats after depicting Trump as Nazi Germany’s brutal dictator Adolf Hitler on a wall in Bristol, England, in February 2016. “I will never give in to fear mongering, nor will I ever be censored,” the London-based street artist, who is originally from Chicago, told The Huffington Post at the time. “I am American and I believe in freedom of speech and artistic freedom of expression.”

A photo posted by valenciaurbanadventures (@valenciaurbanadventures) on Nov 15, 2016 at 2:00pm PST

Street artists Barbiturikills and Hope.xlf created this mural in Valencia, Spain, shortly after Trump’s presidential election victory. “We were freaking out about the result, it was like a bad joke so that’s why we painted it,” Barbiturikills told The Huffington Post. It’s since been removed, however.

3Don’t Feed The Trolls (TABBY)

TABBY painted “Don’t Feed The Trolls” in Vienna before the presidential election. “Trump is everything that’s right and wrong with America and the world,” TABBY told HuffPost at the time. “He’s the American Dream of being super wealthy and saying what you want, while being totally out of touch with reality.”

And TABBY’s third anti-Trump piece in Vienna was, the artist told HuffPost, “all about how good old Donald will do anything for attention.”

6Dump Trump (Hanksy)

Van Tine Dennis/ABACA USA

New York street artist Hanksy depicted Trump as a giant pile of crap on Manhattan’s Lower East Side in the summer of 2015. It lasted the course of the presidential campaign, but was sadly whitewashed in early January after city officials threatened to fine the building’s owner if it wasn’t removed.

Herr Nilsson painted “The Cock Grabber” under a tram bridge in Stockholm. It was in response to Trump’s disgusting comments about women during the infamous 2005 bus ride with former “Access Hollywood” host Billy Bush, Nilsson told The Huffington Post.

The Indecline collective painted this “Rape Trump” mural near Tijuana airport on the old U.S.-Mexico border wall in 2015. “We want to raise awareness [about the] horrible shit he said,” a member of the collective told Vice at the time. “Controversy works better than something subtle.”

The artist is unknown, but this graffiti is believed to have appeared at Heaven Skate Park in Hartford, Connecticut, in September 2015.

27Donald Eres Un Pendejo (Ilegal Mezcal)

Liquor brand Ilegal Mezcal called Trump a “dumbass” in this Spanish-language graphic, which appeared in New York, Los Angeles, Miami and elsewhere in the run-up to the election.

28Donald McTrump (Ivan Orama)

New York-based artist Ivan Orama‘s piece popped up in his home city, London and elsewhere in the run-up to the election.

29Meanwhile In America… (Greg Auerbach)

Greg Auerbach initially painted “Meanwhile In America…” in California featuring President Donald Trump and his Vice President Mike Pence. But the artist switched out Pence for Russian President Vladimir Putin in January 2017 after people scratched out Trump’s face from his first mural. “Without being hateful, I wanted to make a piece that expressed two things; we spent so much time focusing on whether or not the election was cheated, that we barely explored the fact that all of our disconnects with each other left a gap wide enough for president trump to squeeze through,” Auerbach told HuffPost. “Secondly, I wanted to relate to what many of us feel is the biggest shortcoming of this new administration and president; a lack of qualification, and a sense of recklessness, be it a political recklessness, or (more dangerously) a moral one.”